Imoo national woods

In his correspondence, Minakata Kumagusu mentioned frequently 'Imoo national woods' (former Kawakami village and Samukawa village) as his research field. In this woods, Kumagusu made a four-month staying for mycological observation and collection in the winter 1928-1929. After finishing this tough project, Kumagusu wrote a note with illustration and a haiku, which is today reproduced as a monument in a camping park along Itani river, near the entrance to Imoo forest path.

Until only half a century ago when Kumagusu spent a winter there for researches despite his age and severe coldness, most part of Kii peninsula was still covered with the primeval forests from the days before mankind. Even the reminiscence of the diversity in those pristine wilderness could hardly be found today.

I have dedicated my life
since when I was nine
to Mycology, for which I have been wandering
restlessly from East to West
to be sixty three, and have now reached
here to further my research despite tough weather
without knowing to which end it will lead me.

Koke no shita ni
Umorenu
Mono ya
Kani no ko

(A crab shell at the roadside, not yet covered
with the moss, in the sight of passersby.)